1. Jose Luis Castillo I (2002): This is pretty much the only
fight on Mayweather’s record that you could make a convincing argument
he deserved to lose. Castillo’s reputation has taken such a battering in
recent years from blowing off making weight and declining ring
performances that many people have forgotten what a formidable fighter
he was in his prime. When Mayweather fought Castillo he hadn’t lost in
almost four years and had recently defeated the very excellent Stevie
Johnston. Mayweather, unknown at the time, went into the bout with a
badly injured left shoulder.
Mayweather used his footwork and razor sharp reflexes to keep
Castillo largely at bay for the first five rounds until Castillo worked
his way into the fight with a withering body assault and an assortment
of flagrant fouls. Castillo lost a point in the eighth round for hitting
on the break (he did this repeatedly throughout the bout). The
always-awful Rick Drakulich struck again in the ninth round when he
evened the score by taking a point away from Mayweather for using his
elbows. The judges scored the bout 115-111 (twice) and 116-111 all for
Mayweather, which was booed loudly by the pro-Mexican crowd.
Interestingly, Harold Letterman scored the fight 115-111 for
Castillo—the only fight on record that Letterman did not score in favor
of Mayweather. The bout was controversial enough that Mayweather fought
an immediate rematch with Castillo.
2. Marcos Maidana (2013): There is no question that Mayweather
underestimated Maidana—if not physically than mentally. How could he
not? Maidana wouldn’t be favored to beat many of the top fighters
Mayweather has defeated over the years and yet the Argentine gave
Mayweather one of his most epic struggles. Make no mistake at the midway
point of the fight Mayweather was in the hole and had to fight his way
out of it the second half of the bout. Maidana’s wild and unpredictable
assaults gave the ultra-technical Mayweather fits. For the first time in
ages—maybe ever—Floyd didn’t seem to know how to solve the puzzle in
front of him.
Fortunately for Mayweather, his stamina is second-to-none and he
thinks well in late stages of fights better than just about any fighter
in recent boxing history. Mayweather gradually increased his punch
output and brought the fight into the center of the ring where his
faster hands could have a greater effect. Even though Mayweather could
never hurt Maidana, his greater technique prevailed by way of a razor
thin majority decision, with scores reading: 117-111 (ridiculous),
116-111 and 114-114.
3. Oscar De La Hoya (2007): In what was the high selling PPV
fight in the history of boxing (it sold 2.7 million units), Mayweather
won a non-controversial but close unanimous decision over his nemesis
Oscar De La Hoya. The fight was deemed by the mainstream press as “the
fight to save boxing” but instead turned out to be a tactical affaire
where nothing memorable happened. Still, the bout was groundbreaking and
changed forever the way a PPV event would be marketed.
De La Hoya came out with an excellent game plan that consisted of
using his jab and size to bully Mayweather to the ropes where he could
out-hustle his faster opponent. De La Hoya built a slim lead on the
scorecards by the mid-way point of the bout before his stamina and jab
went to ruin. Mayweather began to get into the zone and hummed De La
Hoya repeatedly with right hands over Oscar’s now lazy jab. If this
fight had happened in 2003 instead of 2007 who knows how it might have
gone, but on this night Mayweather was superior if not all that
impressive. It still stands as the only split decision victory in
Mayweather’s entire career.
4. Miguel Cotto (2012): Many experts are convinced that
Mayweather ducked Cotto in the late 2000’s when the Puerto Rican was in
his prime. Their 2012 fight could be proof of this, as Mayweather had a
titanic struggle against a version of Cotto that many viewed as years
past his best. Cotto came with a brilliant strategy of using a stiff jab
right up the middle to break Mayweather’s shoulder roll defense. At
times, most notably in a dominant eighth round for Cotto, it worked
brilliantly. Cotto bloodied Mayweather’s nose and lumped his face up in
way very few fighter ever have. Mayweather, however, was never really in
danger of losing the bout. His faster hands and superior stamina were
always going to win out and he dominated the championship rounds in what
was one of the most entertaining fights of his career.
5. Jesus Chaves (2001): This is one of the most entertaining yet
little known fights in Mayweather’s entire career. The match was
absolutely brutal for as long as it lasted and showcased a very
different and more offensive version of Mayweather in his prime. Chavez
was riding a 31-bout win streak going into the bout and was determined
to give Mayweather hell. He did just that by pinning Mayweather against
the ropes with a near constant stream of aggression and body punching.
Mayweather showcased his brilliant (and underrated) ability to fight in
the pocket by rolling with Chavez’s punches and rocketing him back with
vicious uppercuts and right hands. Mayweather had reportedly struggled
mightily to make the 130-pound limit and, therefore, must be given
credit for pulling out ahead in such a brutal affaire. The bout ended in
the ninth round when Chavez’s trainer Ronnie Shields surprisingly
stopped what had been a competitive fight up to that point.
6. Carlos Hernandez (2001): This fight wasn’t tough in a
competitive sense but it stands out as one of Mayweather’s greatest
physical struggles because he fought much of the bout against the
world-class Hernandez with a shattered left hand. In fact, Mayweather
suffered the only “official” knockdown of his entire career when, after
hitting Hernandez with a left hook in the sixth round, Mayweather went
to canvas withering in pain. Mayweather looked like he was in
excruciating pain and must be given enormous credit for fighting through
a brutal injury and not submitting. It came during a stretch between
2001-2003 when Mayweather struggled in just about every fight from hand
problems. It proved that Mayweather, despite his flashy defensive style,
is all-fighter when it counts.
7. Emanuel Augustus (2000): The fight took place on the now
defunct HBO-fight series “KO Nation” and was Mayweather’s first fight
since firing his father as trainer in favor of his uncle Roger
Mayweather. In the fight we saw the transition of Mayweather’s style
from a pure boxer into more of a boxer-puncher. Augustus (then Burton)
is one of the most gifted fighters in the history of boxing to have a
50-50 record and pushed Mayweather with his wonky technique and
otherworldly courage. Augustus took a sadistic amount of punishment from
Mayweather but often replied with a smile and volley of punches in
return. Augustus probably didn’t win a single round but Mayweather often
states in interviews that it was one of his toughest nights in the
ring. The bout was stopped in the ninth round to save Augustus from
taking anymore unnecessary punishment.
8. Zab Judah (2006): Many people would probably place this fight
much higher on the list than number eight but they would be forgetting
just how utterly one-sided this fight was from about round five onwards.
Still, Judah, with his absurd hand speed, gave Mayweather a few
legitimate scares early on. Judah is one of the few fighters Mayweather
has ever boxed that had faster hands than he did and it took a prime
Mayweather a few rounds to figure the Brooklyn product out. Judah was
probably deprived of scoring a knockdown when he clocked Mayweather with
a straight left hand that caused Mayweather’s glove to touch the canvas
in round two. In the fifth round Mayweather began to take over the
fight and proceeded to dole out a vicious beating from that point
forward. In fact, its very likely Mayweather would have scored a
stoppage victory had the melee in round ten not occurred. The final
scores were 116-112, 117-111 and 119-109 all for Mayweather.
9. Jose Luis Castillo II (2002): The rematch to Mayweather’s
greatest struggle as pro was a much more decisive albeit still
challenging victory. Mayweather used a great deal more lateral movement,
combination punching and jabs to keep the rugged Mexican at bay.
Castillo, ever the competitor, remained competitive in a fight that was
utterly devoid of any notable exchanges. Mayweather, probably still
feeling the effects of the first bout, never took any chances in the
rematch and boxed very cautiously. It was yet another display of
Mayweather’s unique ability to make adjustments in the ring. The scores,
however, reflected the closeness of the bout: 115-113 (twice) and
116-112. Ironically, the scores for the rematch were much closer on all
three cards than the first bout where it is felt Castillo fought much
better.
10. DeMarcus Corley (2004): The bout was Mayweather’s first foray
into the 140-pound weight class and it proved to be a thrilling one. The
vastly underrated Corley managed to rock Mayweather on several
occasions, most notably in the third and forth rounds. Mayweather
responded beautifully to Corley’s challenge by eventually dominating the
inside exchanges with a withering assault of combination punching.
Mayweather dropped Corley in the eighth and tenth rounds and only
Corley’s immense courage kept him standing until the final bell.
Mayweather showed in the bout that he had the ability to withstand some
massive punches as well as possessing sublime recuperative powers.
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